Daily morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1850-1864, February 21, 1850, Image 1

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^ftDcEuBSPEB ANWU1. -—Publication Office at No. 117, Bay Street, near the new Custom House.— VOLUME I.] SAVANNAH, THURSDAY MORNING! FEBRUARY 21, 1850 siNOfiE copies two ofiHfiw. ■H i.i fill * 1 . ^NUMB^saa. P^^hed'daily and tri-weekly, HV JOHN M. COOPER. w . x. THOMPSON, EDITOR. terms: The Dnlly Morning New* is delivered to City subscribers at #4 per annum, payable half yearly i» adennee, or for TEN CENTS a week, payable to the Curriers. 9ingle-copies, two cents. The Trl-Weekly Morning News, for the coun try containing all the newamatter and new advertise ments of the daily, is furnished for three dollars per- annum, in advance. Advertisements inserted at the following rates : 1 square, 1 insertion, «0,50 | 1 square 1 month, #7,00 Kach continuance,.. 50 1 square 2 months, 12,00 1 square, l week,... 2,50 | 1 square 3 months, 15,00 Twelve lines or less to constitute a square. Advertisements published every other day, and those inserted once or twice a week, are charged 60 cents per square for each insertion. I.egal advertisements inserted at the nsual rates. Advertisements from transient persons or strangers, must be paid in advance. Yearly advertisers will be restricted to their regu lar boisnesscs, and all other advertisements not pertain ing to their regular business as agreed for, will be charg ed extra. Yearly advertisers exceeding in their advertisements tbo average number of lines agreed for, will be charged •at proportional rates. All advertisements for charitable Institutions and religious Societies will be charged half price. rjp“ Advertisements sent to this office without di rections as to the number of insertions, will be pub lished daily, until ordered to be discontinued, and charged accordingly. All new advertiesments appear in the Tri-week ly Nears, for the country. ** All Letters directed to this office or the Editor, mast he post paid. MORNING NEWS. KITTY CAREY. AN ORIGINAL SONG. In the crowds you daily meet Haveyoa e’er a maiden met, With fairy form and tiny feet, And brow of snow, and locks of jet,- And eyes of most bewitching hue That with aAl shades of feeling vary;- ■She is—shall I tell you who ? Cupid’s cousin—Kitty Carey! Music on the waves at night Sounds not sweeter than her voice; And her smile! it hath such light That beneath it all rejoice. Moves not with more perfect grace Noreid of the sea nor fairy; And she has an angel’s face— Bright, bewitching Kitty Carey..' When her eye is beaming eyi mo, Crave I then the worldling’s tq-ys? No!! the glance that earliest won mo Thrills me wit!h diviner joys. Calmly I survey the strife Of the worldly wise and wary, All that binds my soul to -life, Is its love for Kitty Carey'! The Blasphxmkh’s Death.—A Terrible Wat7iing.~There is something so terribly startling, says the Monmouth (Eng.) Nerlin, in the following facts, and so fearfully exemplify ing the grievous sin and extreme peril of blas pheming the name of the Etornal, that had we nut made minute and careful inquiry, even among the veiy haunts of those living where the occurrence took place, we ehonld have be lieved the whole to bo an exaggerated rumor of some ordinary and every-daf casualty, ra ther than the awfully-true naraCtvc of a dread ful judgement. On the morning of Sunday Inst, a married woman, residing in the Friars’ Fields, * named Sarah Morgan, was obsorved with an infant in her arms, near her own house, disputing with a woman named Elizabeth Volan. A quarrel of a very violent character, so far as word went, shortly afterwards ensued and in reply to an observation made by the woman, Sarah Morgan exclaimed that she hoped that God Almightv would strike her blind, deaf, dumb, and stiff, if she did not revenge herself upon her in a par ticular manner. Almost directly she staggered, let her child fall from her arms to the ground, and would herself apparently have fallen but that, her'neighbors immediately assisted her into ihe house. From the moment that she was thus mysteriously stricken to the hour of her death, at half-past one o’clock on Wednesday morning, the only words she uttered, and just after she was borne in, were “Lord have mercy on my poor soul—have mercy on my children!” and then her voice fulled her, and s(ie became dumb, her sense of hearing was destroyed, her eyes became glossy and sightless, and in about s, xty hours from tho moment in which she wus ttraak down, Death placed his icy hand upon her, and she became a corpse. This fearful <ivent has producod a painful sensation even among the abandoned creatures of the locality 3fi which it occurred. „ ’J he Emperor of Russia has published an- ajeto theSenate, informingthem thatiiis be ovt, r augbter Maria, the Grand. Dutchess of J ° a > uul,a . was safely delivered of a prince, iliunoXsc e h C . e,Vedth0name of8scrgei Maxin ' If tho child survives the Christening with mwh a name his illustrious grand papa will need tm bettor proof of its robust constitution. I Ac Wild Woman has been recently seen " p? n 110 °f the Navidad, in Texas. * , r ' Mcoc k pursued her with dogs, and threw sso upon her shoulders, which she eluded H , )n :TP°d “‘to a thicket. The creature is hr,.,., , .f eet high, and covered with reddish andneck ^ long VT th ® head comin ' “ ran Wlt k the 0 i ,eet f °f a rteer, and and tt ! a , crc< ' i{ > dropped a stick six feet long huvJL"* e u glftsa- Several setlers who to lm „ tae Grangerconcur in believing her marks n r U !? an Twelve years ago foot- thc ]»„, ttlree were 8een together, but within been .uf ar only l ^ e footmarks of ose have lost nr S1 e ‘ ^' s thought some children were «.P Id H r reted in ,he woods - * nd have own thevean ' vln K u P on berries and such things as J ca " steal from settlers. Fall of a Meteor in North Carolina. The National Intelligencer publishes a long account of a reflaarkablc stone which tell on the plantation of Hiram Bost in Caburras County. N. C. on the 31st October last, by Mr. J. H. Glibbon of the U. S. Mint at Charlotte- The rock, or meteorite,—'‘a dark metallic mass of bluish gritty rock 1 ’—weighing 191-2 lbs., is 8 inches long, 6 wide and 4 thich. and buried itself in the ground a little more than its own length, above 300 yards from the barn where Mr. Bost was standing with a friend—both of whom heard the explosion in the air and saw it fall. It bore in spots marks of recent farcture, was coated with a thin black crust, as if it had been exposed to Are, and when examined by Prof. Glibbon was slightly affected by the light colored clayish soil, in which it had buried itself on its descent. Upon spots where superficial flakes have been broken from the rock, appar ently in the act of cooling, they discover the body to be slate-colored, and upon these parts lustrous points appear, and indicate much metal. It has been pro cured by Prof. Chas. U. Shepard of the Charleston Medical College; who has paid much attention to aerolites, and will publish a scientific description of it. The explosion and commotion in the at mosphere was distinctly heard in every direction—evidence having been receiv ed from the remote parts of Ashe County, 250 miles distant. The writer says:— “Since the discovery of the rock by Mr. Bost, we have rumors of the falling of oth er masses in different directions, without being yet able to obtain any other portions of the body. We hear of one large mass ‘falling in water which is dashed up as high as a man’s head” in Union county. That some negroes, who were picking cotton in a field, heard a body full near them. “A negro boy also showed a sit uation in the woods where he said he saw the bushes move, when a rock fell near him.” Similar aJWounts are heard from Chester District imiS. C., and from Gaston county on theJSvest side of the Catawba; but one nek has yet been found. II A luminous body was seen by numbers beiore the explosive detonation, appar ently proceeding in a direction from which the solid mass diverged. One man, ly ing upon his back tm a wagon load of corn, called out to the driver that he saw ‘-a fiery body” passing from the west ward. Two small Boys, sons of one of the workmen at tha mint, on a plantation five miles west of| jCharlotte, saw “the light of a long thil flaming substance, were alarmed by itland ran to tell their father some time befcre he heard the ex plosion.” .* Others give a description of “a ball of fire, of a dense but dark heat, followed by a straight elongated tail, like iron ad vanced to a white heat, and sparkling in its passage from west to east, rising like a rocket from the distant horizon, and pas sing at a curvature through the air with a long white streak behind it.” The boys described the appearance of the luminous object to their father to be like “the post” (about three and a half feet long) “of an old-fashioned hickory- bottomed chair.” In every instance in which the meteor was visible, the time was before the ex plosion was heard; and many who heard the report saw no light, either because their attention was not drawn in the pro- per direction, or that the meteor was on ly visible in its ardent state at the com mencement of its activity. Some persons estimate the lapse of time from the first sight of the flaming meteor till the return sound of the explosion, at several minutes; some computing the time from the dis tance they had walked, and others from the action of their horses; but, under the circumstances, such estimates prove very deceptive. Case of Hydrophobia.-f he Philadelphia Led ger says that a painful case of hydrophobia at pre sent excites the sympathies of the people of Manayunk. Mr. Samuel Burns, a resident of the borough, was attacked with tho symptoms of this terrible malady on Thursday morning, and his spasms were so violent that it was fear ed ho would not survive until night. He was bitten by a dog belonging to an acquaintance of his some time last fall. Singular Phenomenon.—A black rainbow was seon by the citizens of New Bedford, on Tuesday evening about 8 o'clock. Its direction wus from the Northwest to the South east ; it was visible about 20 minutes. The Sovereigns of Europe.— The General Gazette of Leipsic snows that the number of European sovereigns, including the Emperor of Brazil, who belongs to a European dynasty, and ex clusive . of the semi-sovereigns, Prince Monaco, is at present 48, of whom 33 be long to Germany, and three are women. The eldest of these crowned heads is the King of Hanover, who is 781-2 years of age. Of the others, seven are between 60 and 70, fourteen between 50 and 60, eight between 40 and 50, nine be tween 30 and 40, and five between 20 and 30. Three have not yet attained their 20th year, viz: the Emperor of Austria, the Queen of Spain, and the Prince of Waldeck, who is only thirteen. The Sovereign who has reigned lon gest is the Prince of Schamburg Lippe, who has been seated on his throne, such as it is, for nearly 63 years; he is the only one whose accession dates from the last century. Six sovereigns are celibi- tarians, and have always been so. viz: the Pope, (compulsorily) the. Emperor of Austria, the Duke of Brunswick, the Princes ot Reus Schieiz, and Waldeck, and the Landgrave of Hesse Homberg. Four are widowers. One, the King of Denmark, has been twice divorced, and another, the Elector of Hesse, contracted a morganatic marriage; a third, the Sultan of Turkey, livies in a state of po lygamy. Of the 35 wives or husbands of the reigning sovereigns, the eldest is the Duchess of Saxe Weimcr, aged 64; and the youngest the Queen of Bavaria, aged 25. Of the married sovereigns, 13 are without issue, and the other 28 have male heirs presumptive; of the latter, six are married. Absence of Mind.—A woman in Ohio put her baby into a washing tub, and its dirty frock and petticoats into the cradle, and sent her little boy to rock it. She did not discover her mistake until the baby cried when she pinned its left leg to the line, as she hung it out in the yard to dry. Mesnierism the Work of Satan !— There is a gentleman lecturing in New York city on Mesmerism, for the purpose of showing to the pious public that this science is a horrible invention of Satan himself! and that its practice is forbid den and characterized as demoniacal in the Scriptures. Monuments from Nicaragua.—Mr. Squier, Charge d’ Affaires of the United States to Gua temala, has sent some very extraordinary mon uments from the Island of Zapatona, in the Lake of Nicaragua, to the Smithsonian Insti tution. They consist of two statues—one of which represents a tiger springing upon tho back of a sitting figure. Both arc carved in block basalt. They arc not among the largest and more elaborate, as these cannot be removed except by powerful artificial aids. Some are as large, as the columns of the Hall of Represen tatives. MORNING NEWS Book anil lob fruiting ©fficc, GAlfDRY'S BUILDING, BtjLL-ST. J. B. CUBBEBfiE, Printer of the Daily Morning News, re spectfully informs his friends and the public, that having made extensive additions to his well selected assortment of printing materials, he is prepared to execute with despatch everv variety of BOOK and JOB PRINTING, and on terms ns reasonable as those of any other establishment in the South. By the employ ment of the best materials and superior work men, and giving his personal attention to the business, he doubts not that ho will be able to give the fullest satisfaction to all who may fa vor him with their patronage. er Orders may bo 16ft At the Book Store in Congress-street, or at the office of the Daily Morning News, No. 117 Bay-st. jun 17 TSrncr’s Compound Fluid Extract of Con- yxn and tStlllingia. This preparation is a highly Concentrated Ex tract, containing all the Active Medicinal Prop erties of the Conyza, (commonly known ns Black Root,) and tho Stillingin, or Queen’s Delight. These plants have been long since used among our Southern Negroes and in empyrical practice, with the happiest results, in cuse$ of Choreic Rheumatism, Ulcers of long standing, and Sec ondary Syphilis. It is much superior to nny pre parations of Sarsaparilla as an alterative, being more active and prompt in its operation on tho system. These facts have induced the subscrib ers to present to the attention of Physicians a preparation prepared according to strict Chemi cal and Pannaceutical science, devoid of nil the feculent and inert parts of the roots, not doubt ing that it will supersede the unscientific and crude preparations hitherto used. Price—$1 per bottle, or six bottles for $5. Prepared and sold by TURNER & ODEN, Monument Square, oavannah, Ga. nov 6 sr&ooL. The subscriber rospectfullyannounces that ho has opened a School in the basement of the Second Baptist Church, in which will be taught all the branches of a thorough English Educa tion. Particular attention will be given to tho elementary studies. • BERNARD MALLON. References.—Rev. J. T. Robert, Rev. H. O.Wyer. * PROSPECTUS OF THE DAILY MORNING NEWS, An Independent Commercial and News Paper, to be Published in the City of Savannah. BY JOHN M COOPEn, EDITED BY W. T. THOMPSON, Author of “ Major Jones' Courtship," “Chronicles of Pineville," “ Sketches of Travel,'’ fa- fa A Windfall for a Jersey Bank.—A letter from a young man of this city, now in San Fran cisco, says that$20,000 in bills of the Trenton Banking Co. were destroyed by the late fire in a gambling house in that city. The individual who suffered the loss also had $10,000 in gold in the same place, which was also destroyed. He,.however, said that he would make it. up soon, and sure enough, in four days ho inform ed tho writer that he was as well off as before the fire.—Newark Daily Advertiser. At a late court, a man and his wife brought cross action, each charging the othor with as sault and battery. On investigation, it appear ed that the husband had pushed the door against his wife, anu that the wife in return had pushed the door against her husband. A gentleman at the bar remarked that he could set no improprietv in a man and his wife a- doring each other. 0 s " A Mormon lecturer is travelling through Scotland, and seeking to influence emigration to the U. States. C O-PARTNERSHIP NOTICE The subscriber having this day associated wjth him Mr. L. J. GUILMART1N, the busi ness hereafter ill be conducted (at the old stand correr of Whitaker and Congress-streets) under the style of M. PRENDERGAST A CO. mar 1 M. PRENDERGAST. CARD .—The undersigne having re opened, with an entire New stock ol DRUGS, CHEMICALS, and FANCY ARTICLES, at No. 139 South-side Brough- ton-street, (formerly Walker’s Marble Yard,)is now ready to furnish anything in his line, at the shortest notice. SODA WATER, made in his own peculiar way, sent to any part of the city, and always to be had at the store, in the highest state of perfection. Prescriptions put up with care and de spatch. The subsriber having served the public long and faithfully, respectfully solicits a share ol patronage. july 16 THOS. RYERSON. TVT EW BOOKS.—The Pern’s Daughter; by 1 * Lady Lytton Bulwer. Confessions of Concregan, tho Irish Gil Bias; by Chas. Lever, author of Charley O’Malley, &c. Also, new supplies of Agnes Grey; Shirley; Edmond Dantes; Hearts and Homes, complete; Norwood, or Life on the Prairies, &c. &c. For sale by .1. B. CUBBEDGE, Congress-street jnn 15 riHJRPENTINE.-lO Bbis City Dis -1- tilled for sale by July 31 J. G. FALLIGANT. P JACOBS, SEGARANDTOBAC- • CO STORE, No.27 Bull Street, (Sign of the Indian near Monument Square) Savannah, Geo. N. B.—Keeps constantly on hand, Spnnish, Half Spanish and American Segars, at Whole sale and Retail. Also Chewing Tobacco, Snuff, &c. Experience boa proven both the practicability and usefulness of the penny Frets. Within the few yean past all the Northern and Eastern cities, at well as moitof those South and West of na, have been sup plied with papers of tbit description, whose small di mensions enable their publishers to issue them at a price so low as to place them within the reaeh ul all, and thus to make them the best mediums for the gen eral diffusion of information on ;all subjects bearing upon the interests of community. By cheapening tho Press, all have been participants in its benefits, while the publishers and conductors, by a greatly increased patronage,have been made amply remunerated for their expenditure of capital and labor. Believing that the growing prosperity of Savannah authorizes, and that her interests demand the estab lishment of a cheap commercial and news medium, we have determined to publish the Daily Morning News as nearly as possible upon the plan of the penny Press of the Northern cities. The Morning News will bo emphatically a Com mercial Newspaper, devoted to the diffusion of useful .information on all subjects of popular interest, and to the advancement of City and State interests, gener ally ; preserving at all times a strictly neutral and independent position in regard to Politics and Parties. Arrangements have been made for giving tho paper all the facilities enjoyed hy the best Daily Papers, and no pains will be spared to make it satisfactory in all its departments, and to give it the character of a res pectable, useful, and reliable Journal. In view of the great advantages which must result to the citizens and bnriness man from the establishment of such a paper in Savannah, wo foel that we may ask and safely count upon a liberal suiiport. Terms.—The Daily Morning News will be issued and served to subscribers at $4, per annnm, payable half yearly, in advance; or, 10 Cents per week, pay able to the Carriers. Savannah, January, 1850. Groceries, F*uit»,ftcT HP BE Subscribers have now on hatad and in store A the followiag goods, purebeshd In NeW-YdA the al 't a and Harris' crutbed. Ground, itoofaed fftMnkiud Sugars; Porto U|co and Mutcavado do; fr«h Rico; smoked Uahhnt; Hyson .Young ftysoh aridOolong Tods, Of superior qualities for family nHq Pork Hams (I San- SULr v hl t y i curi> *» e< i Uftl to “w city.) Herring; New-York City Mess P«rk; superior Ftarcb; London Brown Stout and Scotch Ale; a superior m- bottled cider: Water Pails; smoked tongues, a lew half boxes Bunch Raisons, in layers oftA- eltent quality; a superior Article Menrith. Syrup; Jddd'a patent Candles, by the box, and at retail; toceebbr with a general assortment of dried Plums, Peaches Zante Currents, Prone*, paber.shefied Almonds, Cit ron, Capers, Canhorf Ginger,Ottve Gil, Peahen Nuts Tapioca Macaroni. Cdyeune Pepper, Mustard, prepared a^saastsa sets* "* FORD A WATts, sop 25 (bn Barnard street. G unsi-gun 81—BDWABd LOVELL, Manufacturer and importer of every description of Double aitd Single bar rel Guns and RrflW,Dueling, Bdlt,Holster, l’odk- et and Six-barreled' Revolving Pistols, and every variety of Gun material and Grin mple- menta, &c. Flasks, Pouches, Percussion Caps, Powder Shot, Lead, and every article in the Sportsman’s line, for sale low. Guns re-stocked, Flin'r-lock* altered to percussion, and repair ng dor* as Usual. No. 11 Bucrtard sticet South aide Market sign of the Indian. iuh 16 The ship Anton, Elliot, hchne, at New'York on tha 37th inBt. N EW MUSIC SYORfe.—'Th© subscriber iffsj fully informs the public that be will 3ri baud, a large stock of Muafo, of both Foreign «n)l! sio will find at, hi. store all the newest Songs, Duetts. Waltzes, Polkas, Marches, Ac.; compositions of tile foreign Masters: Beethoven, Moeart, Liszt, Thalbsrf, Hertz,Beyer, Rosellen, lluntcn. and others; Mneic for the Guitar, Flbte, Violin, lnstrhction Books of all kinds, Violin and Guitar, Strings, Bridges, pecs, £c. He has also mode anraugemantsi with Houses, both in. New York and Philadelphia, torwesive the newest pub lications immediately after their issue from the prats. Order* left at his Store for ‘ Music not on batid/in quantity or for a single piece, Will he Zenit on by the first steamer leaving for New York, and received on its return. oct 16 JOHN M. COOLER. AGUERRIAN SKYLlffilY MJ GALLERY.—The Subscriber respect fully announces to the Citizens of ’ Savannah and its vicinity, that he has taken the rooms ovdr Zogbaums & Co’sMusic Store, corher of St. Julian-street hud Market-square, fur,the purpose of taking DACiUERfc&N jtfXMsSES, beautifully Colony),,if .required, and pqt wptn Splendid Morocco Qascs, Locket*, Breast-Pins, Medallions, and Finger Rings; and ventures tp assert, that he williurnish as good; if not * bet ter Likeness than any other neraqp ever located in Savannah He feels hipiself justified in thp above assertion from a pt notice of ^evjeral year* in Boston, assisted fiy all the most recent im provements in.the art. ■^Surpassed by none, and equaled hut by few, This is my motto, and my pictures prove it traa.” The Subscriber has, at great expense, fitted up his appartmenw so a* to secure Hghi directly from above, wMch is considered one of the great est additions wi taking perfect Dagueirrian Lihe- nesM». The Citizens <if Savannah tire respect fully invited to call at hW rooms and examine specimens. Pictures taken at reduced price*. W. V PRENTICE, Permanently Iptjated- N. B.—Instructions given mtheoriWtbnde- riite terms, corner of St. J uliabstract atfe AIak- ket-squure- (Up Stairs.) jgn,J7, IT D SON ’ S CELEBRATED nr SHIRTS—George S. Nichols is now opening another large supply of Judson’s ce brated Shirts, not equalled by any in the Unit States for lit and beauty. Those in want such Goods can get them at moderate pric at the Cheap Clothing Store feb 6 GIBBON’S RANGE, d~VBSERVATBONSonStevens’ Hi»to- V/ry of Georgia.—A further supply received by nov 23 J. M. COOPER. A NNAIzS of the queens OF SPAIN—From the period of the con quests of the Goths down to the reign, of her present Majesty Isabel 2d, with the remarkable events that occurred during fheir reigns, and anecdotes of their courts; by Anita George. James Montjoy, or I’ve been thinking; by A. S. Roe. No. 2 Byrne’s Dictionary of Mechanics En- gino Work and Engineering. Companion to Allendorfs new Method of Learning to Read, Write, and speak the French Language, or Dialogues and a Vocabulary; by George W. Greene, nstructor in.modern Lan guages in Brown University. “Only,” by the author of a Trap to catch a Sunbeam. The Works of the late Edgar Allan Pop; with notices of his Life and Genius; by N. P. Willis, J. R. Lowell, and R. W. Griswold, 2 vols. 12 mo. The American Poultry Yard, comprising the Origin, History and Description of the Breeds of Domestic Poultry, &c. See., illustrated with numerous engravings; by D- J. Browne, author of the Sylva Americana, with an appendix by Samuel Allan. Received and for sale by feb 16 JOHN M. COOPER. T^YE WATER.—Dr. Isaac Thomp r* son’s much celebrated Eye Water, for al complaints of the Eyes. Just received and for sale by G. R. HENDRICKSON, & CO. feb 14 Gibbong’ Buildings. V EIsVET TRIMMINGS.—.Tim received *. a good assortraet of black end colored embossed Velvets, Scolloped do., Forest Trimming*, Ac. nov 29 9- 8. JfAGILL. Harmonic Institute. Corner of St. Jplian-sf. and Market-square. T HE subscribers respectfully unnounce that they have opened a cqrplete MUSICAL ESTABLISHMENT. as above, and hope that in so. doing they will im>t the wishes and wants of the musical public- From its intimate connection with the Har monic Institute of Chaileston, the gume source* and facilities wifi be equally enjoyed- Piano Fortes by ,J . B. DuoUam, Adam 8tod" aid, Wm, Hail &R ,J. l’itsson and others. Military dnstrqme s, of every variety, includ ing the latest itupro ed Sax Horns—complete Bands furnished at New York prices. Violins, by the dozen or single. Country Merchants and doaje are .in.vited to inspect the qualities and price*. Also, Violoncellos, Double Basses, Flute*, Guitars, French and German Accordeonr. Fluti- nas, Harmonicas, Violin Bows, Bridges. Screws, Rosin. Hair for Bows, Mutes, C«po ,d’*atto»,'Mu sic Desks, Tunjng Hammers and Forks, and in fine every article pertaining to the line. All of the above being directly imported by F. Zoglmum, at Charleston, ate offered Wholesale or Retail, at New York Prices. Merchants and others who hove been purehns ingatthe North are invited to test this asser tion by a visit. Instruction books for all instruments, Sheet Music, &c., including till;the new and standard publications. t The best of Strings for all instrument*, dec 20 F. ZOGBAUM & Co. OREASTJPIN FOLFND.-A plain, AJ .H/'ljl R<ax Pip, containing a lock of hair- with “Mpry to Christopher,” and a date in scribed on the back. The owner ran have it by calling at the Book Store of John M- Coofxr, and paying for this advertisement. feb 6 STOVES AND COOKING RAN GES.—The undersigned has noW on le, at NjsW.Xtjr hand and fuf sale, at New-Ymk the Ingest and bo^t assortment of .Cocking Stoves and Ranges4ver offered for safe in this city. They will be sold and warranted to give satisfaction. They may he seen at Owens’ New Bundmgs, South sit aug 1 McAt T ~ HE BA ing (retire in Paris, during vel. author of “F Received by janl9